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« Previous AbstractNatural variation in Pristionchus pacificus dauer formation reveals cross-preference rather than self-preference of nematode dauer pheromones    Next Abstract"Investigations of an olfactory attractant specific for males of the housefly, Musca domestica" »

Worm


Title:Nematode orphan genes are adopted by conserved regulatory networks and find a home in ecology
Author(s):Mayer MG; Sommer RJ;
Address:"Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology ; Tubingen, Germany"
Journal Title:Worm
Year:2015
Volume:20150824
Issue:4
Page Number:e1082029 -
DOI: 10.1080/21624054.2015.1082029
ISSN/ISBN:2162-4046 (Print) 2162-4054 (Electronic) 2162-4046 (Linking)
Abstract:"Nematode dauer formation represents an essential survival and dispersal strategy and is one of a few ecologically relevant traits that can be studied in laboratory approaches. Under harsh environmental conditions, the nematode model organisms Caenorhabditis elegans and Pristionchus pacificus arrest their development and induce the formation of stress-resistant dauer larvae in response to dauer pheromones, representing a key example of phenotypic plasticity. Previous studies have indicated that in P. pacificus, many wild isolates show cross-preference of dauer pheromones and compete for access to a limited food source. When investigating the genetic mechanisms underlying this intraspecific competition, we recently discovered that the orphan gene dauerless (dau-1) controls dauer formation by copy number variation. Our results show that dau-1 acts in parallel to or downstream of steroid hormone signaling but upstream of the nuclear hormone receptor daf-12, suggesting that DAU-1 represents a novel inhibitor of DAF-12. Phylogenetic analysis reveals that the observed copy number variation is part of a complex series of gene duplication events that occurred over short evolutionary time scales. Here, we comment on the incorporation of novel or fast-evolving genes into conserved genetic networks as a common principle for the evolution of phenotypic plasticity and intraspecific competition. We discuss the possibility that orphan genes might often function in the regulation and execution of ecologically relevant traits. Given that only few ecological processes can be studied in model organisms, the function of such genes might often go unnoticed, explaining the large number of uncharacterized genes in model system genomes"
Keywords:Pristionchus pacificus daf-12 dau-1 dauer formation evo-devo intraspecific competition nuclear hormone receptors orphan genes phenotypic plasticity;
Notes:"PubMed-not-MEDLINEMayer, Melanie G Sommer, Ralf J eng 2016/04/29 Worm. 2015 Aug 24; 4(4):e1082029. doi: 10.1080/21624054.2015.1082029. eCollection 2015 Oct-Dec"

 
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